The project "Eliminate the
dengue: Challenge Brazil" by state Brazilian laboratory Fiocruz released
about 10,000 mosquitoes infected with a dengue blocking bacteria
Brazilian
researchers in Rio de Janeiro have released thousands of mosquitoes infected
with a bacteria that suppresses Dengue fever.
The hope is they
will multiply, breed and become the majority of mosquitoes, thus reducing cases
of the disease.
The initiative is
part of a programme also taking place in Australia, Vietnam and Indonesia.
The intercellular
bacteria, Wolbachia, being introduced cannot be transmitted to humans.
The programme
started in 2012 says Luciano Moreira of the Brazilian research institute
Fiocruz, who is leading the project in Brazil .
"Our teams
performed weekly visits to the four neighbourhoods in Rio being targeted.
Mosquitoes were analysed after collection in special traps.
"Transparency
and proper information for the households is priority. "
Ten thousands
mosquitoes will be released each month for four months with the first release
in Tubiacanga, in the north of Rio.
The bacteria
Wolbachia is found in 60% of insects. It acts like a vaccine for the mosquito
which carries Dengue, Aedes Aegypti, stopping the Dengue virus multiplying in
its body.
Wolbachia also has
an effect on reproduction. If a contaminated male fertilises the eggs of a
female without the bacteria, these eggs do not turn into larvae.
If the male and
female are contaminated or if only a female has the bacteria, all future
generations of mosquito will carry Wolbachia.
As a result, Aedes
mosquitoes with Wolbachia become predominant without researchers having to
constantly release more contaminated insects.
In Australia this
happened within 10 weeks on average.
The research on
Wolbachia began at the University of Monash in Australia in 2008. The
researchers allowed the mosquitoes to feed on their own arms for five years
because of concerns at the time Wolbachia could infect humans and domestic
animals.
Three more
neighbourhoods will be targeted next, and large scale studies to evaluate the
effect of the strategy are planned for 2016.
Dengue re-emerged
in Brazil in 1981 after an absence of more than 20 years.
Over the next 30
years, seven million cases were reported.
Brazil leads the
world in the number of Dengue cases, with 3.2 million cases and 800 deaths
reported in the 2009-2014 period.
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